The cortisol awakening response (CAR) has been associated with depression and a broader range of internalizing problems. Emerging adulthood is characterized by numerous stressful transitional life ...events. Furthermore, the functioning of the neurobiological stress system changes across development. These considerations underscore the importance of evaluating the physiological stress system in emerging adults in identifying the extent to which cortisol levels vary with risk and protective factors for mental health. The present study evaluated the association between internalizing symptoms and perceived life satisfaction with CAR in 32 young adults. Three saliva samples were collected to measure cortisol levels upon awakening and participants completed the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS) and Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS). Results show a significant positive correlation between area under the curve for CAR with internalizing symptoms (DASS total) and the DASS-depression subscale, but not with life satisfaction. Study limitations, implications, and future directions for these finding were discussed.
Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) is a serious problem in adolescents. Development and optimization of novel interventions for these youth will require a deeper knowledge of the neurobiology of ...depression. A well-established phenomenon of depression is an attention bias toward negativity and away from positivity that is evidenced behaviorally and neurally, but it is unclear how symptom reduction is related to changes to this bias. Neurobiological research using a treatment probe has promise to help discover the neural changes that accompany symptom improvement. Ketamine has utility for such research because of its known rapid and strong antidepressant effects in the context of TRD. Our previous study of six open-label ketamine infusions in 11 adolescents with TRD showed variable response, ranging from full remission, partial response, non-response, or clinical worsening. In this study, we examined the performance of these participants on Word Face Stroop (WFS) fMRI task where they indicated the valence of affective words superimposed onto either congruent or incongruent emotional faces before and after the ketamine infusions. Participants also completed a clinical assessment (including measurement of depression symptomology and anhedonia/pleasure) before and after the ketamine infusions. Following ketamine treatment, better WFS performance correlated with self-reported decreased depressive symptoms and increased pleasure. Analyses of corticolimbic, corticostriatal and default mode (DMN) networks showed that across networks, decreased activation during all conditions (congruent negative, congruent positive, incongruent negative, and incongruent positive) correlated with decreases in depressive symptoms and with increases in pleasure. These findings suggest that in adolescents with TRD, clinical improvement may require an attenuation of the negativity bias and re-tuning of these three critical neural networks to attenuate DMN and limbic regions activation and allow more efficient recruitment of the reward network. Lower activation across conditions may facilitate shifting across different salient emotional stimuli rather than getting trapped in downward negative spirals.
•Twenty-five adolescents with a depressive disorder participated in this preliminary study.•Results show that poor baseline executive functioning predicts a favorable psychotherapy response.•This ...line of work is relevant to personalization, allowing patients to maximize treatment resources that are best matched for them.
The human brain is always active; it wanders freely during rest as well as when we lose focus during tasks. Mind-wandering encompasses spontaneous thinking, such as processing recent experiences, ...problem solving, and achieving insights. Understanding this unconstrained brain activity may lead to clues about the neural mechanisms of mental health problems. Brain networks implicated in mind-wandering include the default mode network (DMN), the salience network, and task-positive networks including the frontoparietal control network and dorsal attention network.
Given that these networks mature during adolescence, coinciding with a time notable for the emergence of mental health problems, quantifying and examining the neural correlates of mind-wandering in adolescents with psychopathology may shed light on how the healthy and pathological brain functions and point to possible methods of intervening.
•Cortisol was assessed in the context of the Trier Social Stress Test.•Participants included adolescents with depression who had or had not repeatedly engaged in non-suicidal self-injury.•Adolescents ...who engaged in non-suicidal self-injury showed evidence of lower overall cortisol levels and less reactivity.•Adolescents who engaged in non-suicidal self-injury had higher ratings of expressed stress.•These results suggest that physiological and behavioral stress functioning differs considerably across these groups of adolescents.
Non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is characterized by causing harm to one’s own body without the intent of suicide. While major depressive disorder (MDD) has been associated with elevated cortisol (at least in some subgroups), prior studies in NSSI have suggested that NSSI is associated with blunted reactivity to stress of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, possibly consistent with an allostatic load model. The present study used a multi-level approach to examine salivary cortisol in the context of a social stressor in 162 adolescents (ages 12 to 19 years old) with MDD with a history of repeated engagement in NSSI (MDD/NSSI) versus MDD without repeated NSSI (MDD), and healthy controls (HC). Observed (expressed) and self-reported (experienced) ratings of stress were also obtained during the social stress paradigm. The results showed that MDD/NSSI exhibited lower salivary cortisol levels and differed in cortisol trajectories in the context of a social stressor compared to HC and MDD. Observed stress, but not self-reported stress, during the social stress paradigm was greater for the MDD/NSSI than HC. Follow-up analyses suggested the possibility that this pattern of lower cortisol for those who engage in NSSI was present in females and males, and was more pronounced in those with repeated NSSI (but not subthreshold NSSI) and those with a history of NSSI and suicide attempts. Overall, these findings add to the prior literature and begin to show a consistent pattern for how stress is processed in atypical ways for those who engage in repeated NSSI. Importantly, these results suggest that some of the heterogeneity across adolescent depression may be better represented by these underlying biological processes, perhaps even representing subgroups that will benefit from different types of intervention. Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Dysregulation in Depressed Adolescents with Non-Suicidal Self-Injury.
•Multitrajectory modeling identified four stress correspondence profiles.•The lower correspondence profile was linked to depression-related symptomology.•Lower correspondence youth also exhibited ...less positive frontolimbic connectivity.
Dysregulated stress responsivity is implicated in adolescent risk for depression and self-injurious thoughts and behaviors (STBs). However, studies often examine levels of the stress response in isolation, precluding understanding of how coordinated disturbance across systems confers risk. The current study utilized a novel person-centered approach to identify stress correspondence profiles and linked them to depressive symptoms, STBs, and neural indices of self-regulatory capacity.
Adolescents with and without a major depressive disorder diagnosis (N = 162, Mage = 16.54, SD = 1.96, 72.8% White, 66.5% female) completed the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST), questionnaires, and clinical interviews. Stress experience (self-report), expression (observed), and physiology (salivary cortisol) were assessed during the experimental protocol. Adolescents also underwent a magnetic resonance imaging scan.
Multitrajectory modeling revealed four profiles. High Experience–High Expression–Low Physiology (i.e., lower stress correspondence) adolescents were more likely to report depressive symptoms, lifetime nonsuicidal self-injury, and suicidal ideation relative to all other subgroups reflecting higher stress correspondence: Low Experience–Low Expression–Low Physiology, Moderate Experience–Moderate Expression–Moderate Physiology, High Experience–High Expression–High Physiology. High Experience–High Expression–Low Physiology adolescents also exhibited less positive amygdala–ventromedial prefrontal cortex resting state functional connectivity relative to Moderate Experience–Moderate Expression–Moderate Physiology.
Data were cross-sectional, precluding inference about our profiles as etiological risk factors or mechanisms of risk.
Findings illustrate meaningful heterogeneity in adolescent stress correspondence with implications for multimodal, multilevel assessment and outcome monitoring in depression prevention and intervention efforts.